· · · · · · · · fJlIJ If!4 you /001 ,klof/WfWwd yma;k 7. . "'::-;':'. ..... .') :0"":::-"-.. ..... ' ;\ t ?tt ,;A? liÆ 1tl ,I, '. ..,:g, :,f: ':,...:.:'<' :! ';\; 'j ^ ' . It. bt,,;:,:.:,i1è: ...;;;::; 34 :' ,;1:. \ < {: :A h :. ' ':'.$ H Þ., .: . }'t ",..:" .:, '"",", 'f . \\ . :: :::: ";: :h ::: : it .:.;. i .::: :: ::.: Ji b W HAT AN interesting and fasci- nating picture-mother and daughter with complexions that are really alike in their youthful radiance and charm. Mother in the triumphant, perfected beauty of the forties; daughter in the iridescent loveliness of the teens. A miracle, you ask? An accident? The rare good fortune of one woman? Not at all. This enduring, growing loveliness is the result of simple, faithful, common- sense complexion care-of meeting the progressive needs of the skin as they occur. You, too, can reach the zenith of your charm in the forties by follo'\Ving my simple, economical home treatments. Even a tired, neglected skin responds quickly, eagerly to my Four Creams for the Four Ages of Beauty. And what of the girl? Under her mother's knowing guidance she \vill fol- low the same glorious path of enduring beauty. No,v, at eighteen, she needs only the thorough daily cleans- ing \vhich the instantly- liquefying Barbara Gould .: :::: AVAILABLE .. ..:.:" '-.' " . :. .....".. - . .... . ." '.' .". .. ... .. .... . , ' . '. '- . . . .::: - ::.-'. ". '" ". " .-. .-. :'. " IN ."-'--- .... :::...;:.:.::::}.;. :*':. . * .r : : . . ":-. h...... "',' ..<< .., ;^'8 ,._;" ' lr;;P9 ' "Ì\1\ ->; ' _ ' . k , . . ' " , i , : , . . ' . i . ; . : . : . :' : ,' , : : ; , . . : :". : . :. ' , ... . " m , . , ': , ' , ' , . 'f',: :l :J. >. 1i ' iik': , : "ð };%":: ':ît :. , :. : : , . .: . : . . 4 wr ::?-.-.;.;.:: ìlr% .. ......., .;....:;=(::::; .. ) . -) , Cleansing CrealTI so gcn tly and RO safely provides. At t\venty, \vith the adven t of po,vder and rouge, she will protect her skin, give it a lovely velvety finish, with Barbara Gould Finishing Cream, the ideal make-up foundation, \vhich, being made on a lotion base, can never shine through. Beginning with her thirties, sooner if needed, she will add to her complexion regime Barbara Gould Tissue Cream, the rich oils of which su pplemen t nature's nourishment, preventing lines and wrinkles;. At forty, and beyond, Barbara Gould Circulation Cream will send a fresh, rich blood supply coursing to the inac- tive muscles and cells, revitalizing, in- vigorating, guarding youthful contours. Write today for a copy of my beauty booklet "Any Woman Can Look Lovelier": BARBARA GOULD, 35 West 34th Street, New York. Barbara Gould Creams and other preparations are sold by all leading drug and de- þartment stores. ": .i\::l.,/l \ , : C,. TUBES 50c, JARS $1.10 r: t' .. Y ,. "")í :: ";::. ;::::);;=-: :: .{:t:;:":=;.__..;. .. . . .... ....-;=: .;.::.;..-:=-:i":::;:.:....;::::::::;:;;;..-;:: . and that was more than his share of close calls for one week. When the field narrowed down to the semifinals, we felt fairly sure of Dunlap's winning. He had missed the British title after getting just that close to it. He had, therefore, that extra stimulus a man needs in golf-because a desire to win is often unsettling, whereas the feeling that it is necessary to do so can be almost reassuring. Dunlap gives the appearance of being lazy, light-hearted, and not particular- ly concerned about how the match turns out; you ascribe the slight taciturnity of his manner on the course to courtesy or assume that he is thinking about something else. People who have played against him at Pinehurst, where winters of practice on sand greens gave him the best pitch-and-run shot in the country, know that Dunlap is actually a discon- certingly serious and stubborn oppo- nent. Not satisfied with a game so beautifully grooved that it takes only a few days of practice to reach his peak, he has invented a set of gymnasium ex- ercises which he performs all winter to keep his back and shoulder muscles hard. T o say that the tournament was won with a putter is, of course, an exaggeration, but it was Marston's work on the greens that put out first Noyes and then young Munger. Dun- lap, picking up strokes near the pin in all his early matches, didn't need to in the last. On the third hole, Mar- ston shook his head when he saw his opponent's pitch stop ten inches from the cup. That shot set the pattern for the rest of Dunlap's morning round, and in the afternoon it was merely a question of how long it would be be- fore the holes ran out. Marston was playing fine golf-even fours for the bye holes would have given him a seventy-but he had started much too late. -R. L. T. . DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 14-G. E. Prater, director of the state bureau of foods and standards, considers the rasp- berry a test of child character. "The character of a child can be built or determined in the raspberry patch the quickest of any place I know," he said. "There is no place on earth they will more quickly exhibit the results of their bringing up. If they have been encour- aged at home in concealing facts, mis- representing and cheating, they will hide the berries in the bottom of the box." -Louisiana newsþaþer. Instead of giving them to a child .,:;", psychologist?